From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
Einar Hákonarson |
 |
| Photo of Einar
Hákonarson. |
| Birth name |
Einar Ingvar Hákonarson |
| Born |
January 14, 1945(1945-01-14)
Reykjavík, Iceland |
| Nationality |
Icelandic |
| Field |
painting, printmaking, sculpture, drawing, mosaic, enamels, stained glass |
| Training |
Iceland Academy of the Arts
(National Art School of Iceland (MHÍ)), Valand School of Fine
Arts |
| Movement |
Figurative art, Expressionism |
Einar Hákonarson (b. 14th of January 1945, Reykjavík, Iceland) is one of Iceland's
best known artists. He is an expressionistic and
figurative
painter who brought the figure back into Icelandic painting in
1968. He is a pioneer in the Icelandic art scene and art education.
He has been called “The crusader of the painting”[1], due to
his involvement in those conflicts many Icelandic painters have had
with the public fine art centers over the last 20 years.
Early
life
Einar Hákonarson.
Around the golden calf, 2005
triptych.
Einar Hákonarson was raised in Kleppsholt, Reykjavík. He started
to paint and draw at a very young age. His father was a part-time
artist and his 2 uncles were avid art lovers which was uncommon at
that time in Iceland. Einar was only 15 years old when he was
accepted to The National Art School of Iceland. There he received
his education for the next 4 years following which he went abroad
to Gothenburg Sweden and to study at Valand School of Fine Arts
where he received influence from new modes of art and was
influenced by figurative painting.[2] Whilst
Einar was still studying in Sweden he won the Nordic
countries art prize after an exhibition in the Louisiana Museum of Modern
Art in Copenhagen,
Denmark[3] . He
won a prize in Buenos
Aires, Argentina,
for his printmaking,
and an international printmaking prize in Ljubljana, former Yugoslavia, for a series of pictures after a
trip to the Auschwitz concentration
camp in Poland.[4]
Art
Einar returned to Iceland after his education and held his first
solo exhibition in Bogasalur Reykjavík 1968. His show distinguished
itself from its Icelandic art scene then current as Einar's
paintings were pop, figurative and expressionistic. This exhibition brought
the figure back into the Icelandic painting, which had been
dominated by the abstract art for years.[5]
Einar has always been consistent in his art and his values. He
paints in oil on canvas but also works with other
mediums like printmaking, sculpture, stained glass, enamels and mosaic. The human in its environment has been a
visible thread through his 40 year carrier. Einar claims that he
gets more influenced by feeling for nature, rather than by trying
to paint a specific part of it.[6] In his
work can be seen different kinds of focus, for example on city life
and the modern family unit. He has done a series about The Icelandic sagas, the Holocaust and communism, to name but a few. [7]
Religious themes are common in Einar’s art and he frequently makes
pictures from the Bible.[8]
In later years Einar’s painting style has become loosed from the
strict style at the beginning of his carrier, but without having
abandoned a disciplined composition. Apart from
Iceland, Einar has lived in Sweden (7 years on and off) and for
shorter periods in USA, Germany, and the Czech Republic. Einar is
one of the principal portrait painters in Iceland. He has painted
some of the most influential people of the nation, from politicians
to national poets and artists. [9] His
work can be found in large numbers in official buildings, for
example schools, banks, churches and the Icelandic parliament.
Einar has held over 30 solo exhibitions and numerous group
exhibitions.
Printmaking
Einar Hákonarson.
No more fishing quota, 1999.
Einar has won international awards for his printmaking. He was
the first Icelandic artist to exhibit only printmaking in an art
show (1968) and to publish printmaking folders (Icelandic sagas) [10]. He
was a driving force in founding The Icelandic Printmaking
Association in 1969 and its first president. [11] Later
Einar founded the printmaking department in The National Art School
(MHÍ) when he became its director. Einar has also decorated
numerous books with his printmaking. [12]
Teaching
Einar was only 21 years old when he started teaching in the
National Art School of Iceland. He grew a beard, since he was
younger than most of his students, and has kept it ever since.
Einar founded an art school in 1970 (Myndsýn) with his colleague
Ingiberg Magnússon [13] .
Einar was appointed director of The National Art school of Iceland
in 1978, then 33 years of age. He founded the department of
printmaking and the department of sculpture, which did not exist in
Iceland before and reconstructed the department of ceramics. [14] Einar
has held many art workshops and seminars through his carrier. He held teaching
positions in Sweden, Valand School of Fine Arts
(1964 -1967), Hovedskou art School (1989 – 1991) and Domens Art
School (2000 – 2002).
The
painters' conflict
Einar Hákonarson.
Politician Albert Gudmundsson ,
1983.
In the 1990’s, painters in Iceland became discontent with the
public exhibition rooms. They felt that the painting was totally
left out in the Icelandic art world, and the directors of the
National galleries only focused on conceptual art. The painting was
even declared dead by some of the country’s art historians. [15] Einar
said Icelandic painters had not had a public place to show their
work in 20 years. [16]
Einar, who previously was the artistic counselor of the City Museum
(Kjarvalstadir), became the most energetic spokesman of the
Icelandic painting and its right of existence in the Public
museums, to this date. [17]
The Art
Center
In 1997 Einar Hákonarson built, the first private owned cultural
center in Iceland. The Art Center (Listaskalinn in Hveragerdi) was
a 1000 square meters multi-cultural center, with the main focus on
fine art and the art Einar felt was left out in the public art
centers. [18] The
Art Center produced over 20 exhibitions of paintings and
sculptures, together with numerous concerts, theater performances,
poetry and book readings. Some of the exhibitions were the most
attended in Iceland’s fine art history to date. Einar said ”Finally
there is a place for painters and other artists who do not fit into
the governmental art, run by its long lasting directors”. But the
pioneering drive could not cope with the loan system of its time,
or politics. The Art Center went under after 2 active years.[19]
Loss of
the Art Center
The loss of the Art Center was bigger than most people know.
Iceland’s biggest art collector Sonja Sorillo wanted to get The Art
Center to house 100 of her collected art works, including works of
Picasso, Matisse, Bacon, De Kooning and Pollock. That fell through
when The Art Center was sold in an auction to The West Nordic Fund.
No international art collection exists in Iceland like Mrs.
Sorillo's. Her collection was broken up and sold abroad after her
death. The Art Center was then sold to The Arnesinga Art Museum
(Museum of the region) who had previously declined any
collaboration with Hákonarson’s Art Center.[20]
The Painters
House
Einar lost his home and all of his possessions with the downfall
of The Art Center. But he stood up after being knocked down and
started The Painters House in 2002, a non profitable exhibition
place with co painter Haukur Dor. Later, another painter, Oli G
took Dor's place and 19 exhibitions were made in two years. [21]
Einar opened an unusual exhibition in the so-called “Cultural
night” in Reykjavík 2005. He put up 600 square meters tents and
showed 90 paintings in the city centers park, to demonstrate the
exclusion of the painting in the public art centers for the last 20
years. He called the show “In the Grass Root”.[22] What
followed is unheard of in the Icelandic art history. 3000 people
(1% of the country’s population) attended the exhibition in one day
and showed their support in Einar and the Icelandic painting. After
this show, Icelandic painters formed a group to push for more
democracy in the Public art world. This struggle continues to date.
[23]
Einar Hákonarson.
A sketch , 1980's.
Cultural
scene
Einar has held various prominent positions in the Icelandic art
world, where he has been active in promoting Icelandic art
nationally and internationally. [24] He
was the artistic counselor of Kjarvalstadir, The City Gallery of
Reykjavík 1987 – 1988 and a chairman of many exhibition committees.
He designed and directed the exhibition of The History of Iceland,
on Iceland’s 1100 birthday in 1974. [25] He
was a deputy to the mayor in the governing body of the Hässelby
Slott, cultural site of the Nordic capital cities 1982 - 1992.
Einar Hákonarson lives in Hólmavík with his wife Solveig Hjalmarsdottir.
He works in Reykjavík. (2007) [26]
Notes
Resources
External
links